FA chairman Greg Dyke wants full report into World Cup corruption to be published

Dyke wants the entire 430-page dossier produced by American lawyer Michael Garcia into the bid process for the 2018 and 2022 tournaments to be disclosed.

So far, only a summary of his findings has been announced by FIFA ethics committee judge Hans-Joachim Eckert - which Garcia immediately claimed was incomplete and incorrect.

Dyke has now called for urgent action in order to help restore some credibility to football's world governing body.

"As you probably know the reputation of FIFA was already low in England and much of Europe before the events of last week," Dyke wrote.

ANGRY: Greg Dyke wants the full 430-page dossier on the World Cup corruption investigation to be published [GETTY]

“Complete transparency is required if the actions of all those who bid, including England 2018, are to be judged fairly”

Greg Dyke

“The failure to publish Mr Garcia's report, and his statement that the summary report which was published contained 'numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations', has resulted in a further decline in public confidence of FIFA. We cannot go on like this.

“Complete transparency is required if the actions of all those who bid, including England 2018, are to be judged fairly.”

Dyke is aware that FIFA president Sepp Blatter feels criticism of his regime is strongest in England simply because of this country’s failure to land the 2018 World Cup.

BID: FIFA president Sepp Blatter [GETTY]

But he added in his letter to FIFA exco’s: “The reports do provide compelling evidence of wrongdoing. They cannot be simply dismissed as 'racist' or 'an attack on FIFA' as Mr Blatter described them at the FIFA Congress in Brazil.

“Urgent action is needed if confidence in FIFA is to be rebuilt in England. The FA is of the view that this action should start with the full publication of Mr Garcia's report.”

Former FA chairman David Bernstein yesterday went even further and urged European nations to boycott the 2018 World Cup in order to force FIFA to reform.

“At some stage you have to walk the talk, stop talking and do something,” he said.

“It sounds drastic but frankly this has gone on for years now, it’s not improving, it’s going from bad to worse to worse.”